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Efficient and scalable parametric stereo coding for low bitrate audio coding applications

a parametric stereo coding and audio coding technology, applied in the field of low bitrate audio source coding systems, can solve the problems of prior art systems falling short, unpleasant experiences, and unavoidable mono coding of audio program material, and achieve efficient transmission, low total bitrate demand, and reduced risk of unmasking coding artifacts

Active Publication Date: 2006-02-02
DOLBY INT AB
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  • Abstract
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AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

[0006] The present invention employs detection of signal stereo properties prior to coding and transmission. In the simplest form, a detector measures the amount of stereo perspective that is present in the input stereo signal. This amount is then transmitted as a stereo width parameter, together with an encoded mono sum of the original signal. The receiver decodes the mono signal, and applies the proper amount of stereo-width, using a pseudo-stereo generator, which is controlled by said parameter. As a special case, a mono input signal is signaled as zero stereo width, and correspondingly no stereo synthesis is applied in the decoder. According to the invention, useful measures of the stereo-width can be derived e.g. from the difference signal or from the cross-correlation of the original left and right channel. The value of such computations can be mapped to a small number of states, which are transmitted at an appropriate fixed rate in time, or on an as-needed basis. The invention also teaches how to filter the synthesized stereo components, in order to reduce the risk of unmasking coding artifacts which typically are associated with low bitrate coded signals.
[0007] Alternatively, the overall stereo-balance or localization in the stereo field is detected in the encoder. This information, optionally together with the above width-parameter, is efficiently transmitted as a balance-parameter, along with the encoded mono signal. Thus, displacements to either side of the sound stage can be recreated at the decoder, by correspondingly altering the gains of the two output channels. According to the invention, this stereo-balance parameter can be derived from the quotient of the left and right signal powers. The transmission of both types of parameters requires very few bits compared to full stereo coding, whereby the total bitrate demand is kept low. In a more elaborate version of the invention, which offers a more accurate parametric stereo depiction, several balance and stereo-width parameters are used, each one representing separate frequency bands.
[0008] The balance-parameter generalized to a per frequency-band operation, together with a corresponding per band operation of a level-parameter, calculated as the sum of the left and right signal powers, enables a new, arbitrary detailed, representation of the power spectral density of a stereo signal. A particular benefit of this representation, in addition to the benefits from stereo redundancy that also S / D-systems take advantage of, is that the balance-signal can be quantized with less precision than the level ditto, since the quantization error, when converting back to a stereo spectral envelope, causes an “error in space”, i.e. perceived localization in the stereo panorama, rather than an error in level. Analogous to a traditional switched L / R- and S / D-system, the level / balance-scheme can be adaptively switched off, in favor of a levelL / levelR-signal, which is more efficient when the overall signal is heavily offset towards either channel. The above spectral envelope coding scheme can be used whenever an efficient coding of power spectral envelopes is required, and can be incorporated as a tool in new stereo source codecs. A particularly interesting application is in HFR systems that are guided by information about the original signal highband envelope. In such a system, the lowband is coded and decoded by means of an arbitrary codec, and the highband is regenerated at the decoder using the decoded lowband signal and the transmitted highband envelope information [PCT WO 98 / 57436]. Furthermore, the possibility to build a scalable HFR-based stereo codec is offered, by locking the envelope coding to level / balance operation. Hereby the level values are fed into the primary bitstream, which, depending on the implementation, typically decodes to a mono signal. The balance values are fed into the secondary bitstream, which in addition to the primary bitstream is available to receivers close to the transmitter, taking an IBOC (In-Band On-Channel) digital AM-broadcasting system as an example. When the two bitstreams are combined, the decoder produces a stereo output signal. In addition to the level values, the primary bitstream can contain stereo parameters, e.g. a width parameter. Thus, decoding of this bitstream alone already yields a stereo output, which is improved when both bitstreams are available.

Problems solved by technology

In applications where only low bitrates are available, e.g. Internet streaming audio targeted at users with slow telephone modem connections, or in the emerging digital AM broadcasting systems, mono coding of the audio program material is unavoidable.
However, a stereo impression is still desirable, in particular when listening with headphones, in which case a pure mono signal is perceived as originating from “within the head”, which can be an unpleasant experience.
A particular situation where prior art systems fall short, is when the original signal is a pure mono signal, which often is the case for speech recordings.
This mono signal is blindly converted to a synthetic stereo signal at the decoder, which in the speech case often causes annoying artifacts, and may reduce the clarity and speech intelligibility.
Thus, real world stereo program material contains significant amounts of stereo information, and even if the above switching is implemented, the resulting bitrate is often still too high for many applications.
Furthermore, as can be seen from the resynthesis relations above, very coarse quantization of the D signal in an attempt to further reduce the bitrate is not feasible, since the quantization errors translate to non-neglectable level errors in the L and R signals.

Method used

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  • Efficient and scalable parametric stereo coding for low bitrate audio coding applications
  • Efficient and scalable parametric stereo coding for low bitrate audio coding applications
  • Efficient and scalable parametric stereo coding for low bitrate audio coding applications

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Embodiment Construction

[0017] The below-described embodiments are merely illustrative for the principles of the present invention. It is understood that modifications and variations of the arrangements and the details described herein will be apparent to others skilled in the art. It is the intent therefore, to be limited only by the scope of the impending patent claims, and not by the specific details presented by way of description and explanation of the embodiments herein. For the sake of clarity, all below examples assume two channel systems, but apparent to others skilled in the art, the methods can be applied to multichannel systems, such as a 5.1 system.

[0018]FIG. 1 shows how an arbitrary source coding system comprising of an encoder, 107, and a decoder, 115, where encoder and decoder operate in monaural mode, can be enhanced by parametric stereo coding according to the invention. Let L and R denote the left and right analog input signals, which are fed to an AD-converter, 101. The output from the...

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Abstract

The present invention provides improvements to prior art audio codecs that generate a stereo-illusion through post-processing of a received mono signal. These improvements are accomplished by extraction of stereo-image describing parameters at the encoder side, which are transmitted and subsequently used for control of a stereo generator at the decoder side. Furthermore, the invention bridges the gap between simple pseudo-stereo methods, and current methods of true stereo-coding, by using a new form of parametric stereo coding. A stereo-balance parameter is introduced, which enables more advanced stereo modes, and in addition forms the basis of a new method of stereo-coding of spectral envelopes, of particular use in systems where guided HFR (High Frequency Reconstruction) is employed. As a special case, the application of this stereo-coding scheme in scalable HFR-based codecs is described.

Description

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION [0001] This application is a divisional application of U.S. Ser. No. 10,483,453 filed on Jan. 8, 2004.TECHNICAL FIELD [0002] The present invention relates to low bitrate audio source coding systems. Different parametric representations of stereo properties of an input signal are introduced, and the application thereof at the decoder side is explained, ranging from pseudo-stereo to full stereo coding of spectral envelopes, the latter of which is especially suited for HFR based codecs. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION [0003] Audio source coding techniques can be divided into two classes: natural audio coding and speech coding. At medium to high bitrates, natural audio coding is commonly used for speech and music signals, and stereo transmission and reproduction is possible. In applications where only low bitrates are available, e.g. Internet streaming audio targeted at users with slow telephone modem connections, or in the emerging digital AM broadcas...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): H04R5/00H04H5/00G10L19/008G10L19/02G10L19/14G10L19/24H04SH04S1/00H04S3/00H04S5/00
CPCG10L19/008G10L19/0204H04S3/002H04S1/007G10L19/24H04S5/00
Inventor HENN, FREDRIKKJORLING, KRISTOFERLILJERYD, LARSRODEN, JONASENGDEGARD, JONAS
Owner DOLBY INT AB
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